Five hundred years of climate data from sources such as coral was used in the study

Eric Matson/Australian Institute of Marine Studies

Human-induced global warming began as early as the 1830s just as the Industrial Revolution was gaining steam, a new study shows.

EMBARGO 3AM THURS 25 CLIMATE KEY POINTS

Key points

Climate from past 500 years reconstructed using modelling and natural data

Warming began in 1830s in Arctic and tropical oceans, just 80 years after Industrial Revolution started

Impact of warming in southern hemisphere only became clearly evident around 1960

The "surprise" finding suggests the industrialisation of society had an impact on Earth's temperatures faster than previously thought.

And according to Associate Professor Nerilie Abram of the Australian National University (ANU), the finding also has implications for our understanding of the future impact of human activity on the climate.

The international study, published today in Nature, used detailed reconstructions of climate across the past 500 years to determine when the current warming trend began.

Dr Abram, from ANU's Research School of Earth Sciences and ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science, said anthropogenic climate change was generally thought of as a 20th century phenomenon because direct measurements of climate are rare before the 1900s.

However their study had detected warming in the Arctic and tropical oceans from around the 1830s, just 80 years after the Industrial Revolution started in England.

"It was an extraordinary finding," she said.

"It was one of those moments where science really surprised us. But the results were clear. The climate warming we are witnessing today started about 180 years ago."

Layers of ice that have built up over Antarctica and Greenland provide a way of reconstructing Earth's past temperature.

Nerilie Abram

The team of 25 scientists from the US, Australia, Europe and Asia used climate model simulations and data from the natural record contained in corals, tree rings, cave decorations and ice cores to track climate variations in the world's oceans and continents.

Interestingly, the study found sustained warming was delayed in the southern hemisphere by about 50 years.

Dr Abram said this could be linked to the circulation patterns in the southern oceans that move warmer waters away from the Antarctic and into the sub-surface ocean.

She said the study also found differences in when this sustained warming pushed regional climates outside their average variability.

In the Arctic it occurred in the 1930s, about 100 years after warming began, while in Australia the delayed onset of warming in the southern hemisphere meant the impact of the changing climate was not evident until around 1960.

"Warming began later in the southern hemisphere so we don't see significant warming in Australia until the 1900s," Dr Abram said.

"But we have had rapid warming since then and by 1960 we would say it has moved out of its range of what is normal."

Dr Abram said the study did not alter "anything we know about how climate has changed during the 20th century".

"[But] it does feed into our discussion of what is dangerous climate change and how much we have changed the climate already — it has a place in letting us have the full picture."

She said targets to limit warming to less than 1.5 degrees Celsius were relative to a baseline set between 1880 and 1900.

Dr Abrams said her team's study showed that baseline was within the timeframe of when humans were already changing the climate.

She said even though the warming between 1830 and 1880 was incremental it still needed to be taken into account.

"We are already at one degree warmer and 2016 is shaping up to be about 1.3 degrees, so even though it's a small effect we have to add it in and it's quite significant when talking about these targets we are getting close to."

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